Gold, silver, pgms, mining and geopolitical comment and news

Jobs Report

Gold Today –New York closed Friday at $1,264.40. London opened today at $1,258.40.

Overall the dollar was stronger against global currencies, early today. Before London’s opening:

–The $: € was stronger at $1.1802 after the Friday’s$1.1881: €1.

–The Dollar index was stronger at 93.38 after Friday’s 92.74.

–The Yen was weaker at 110.81 after Friday’s 110.026:$1.

–The Yuan was strongerat 6.7190after Friday’s 6.7200: $1.

–The Pound Sterling was weaker at $1.3050 after Friday’s $1.3149: £1

Yuan Gold Fix

Trade Date

Contract

Benchmark Price AM 1 gm

Benchmark Price PM 1 gm

2017 8 7

2017 7 4

2017 7 3

SHAU

SHAU

SHAU

/

274.98

274.52

Trading at 273.75

275.49

274.22

$ equivalent 1oz at 0.995 fineness

@ $1: 6.7190

$1: 6.7237

$1: 6.7253

/

$1,266.35

$1,264.91

Trading at $1,262.24

$1,269.40

$1,263.53

Please note that the Shanghai Fixes are for 1 gm of gold. From the Middle East eastward metric measurements are used against 0.9999 quality gold. [Please note that the 0.5% difference in price can be accounted for by the higher quality of Shanghai’s gold on which their gold price is based over London’s ‘good delivery’ standard of 0.995.]

New York closed $2 lower than Shanghai’s close Friday. But today, we are seeing a stronger dollar, and a lower dollar gold price in London. The jobs report was met with enthusiasm that turned the dollar higher for now. Even with a stronger dollar we are seeing a stronger Yuan. London opened $3.85 lower than Shanghai but Shanghai was trading at only $2 lower than New York’s Friday close.

Silver Today –Silver closed at $16.25 Friday after $16.63 at New York’s close Thursday.

LBMA price setting: The LBMA gold price was set this morning at $1,257.55 from Friday’s $1,269.30. The gold price in the euro was set at €1,065.90 after Friday’s €1,068.34.

Just before the opening of New Yorkthe gold price was trading at $1,258.20 and in the euro at €1,065.73. At the same time, the silver price was trading at $16.21.

Price Drivers

The jobs report was read by the market in a positive light. It turned the dollar stronger against all currencies and pulled the gold price down in dollar terms. We expected a rise in the gold price because we expected higher employment and felt the market would only react to wage inflation, which, in line with our views, was barely noticeable. But the market looked only at the jobs numbers.

In the euro there was only a small drop in the gold price. So where is the dollar going from now on? We don’t see the gold price falling in other currencies and indeed we are not convinced by the jobs report spurring wage inflation soon. The jobs being created are easily low, but on top of that the impact of technology on quality jobs is heavy. The failure of full employment to spur wages is a structural change that will not reverse.

In the Gold Forecaster we have outlined that in the developed world up to 50% of all jobs will be permanently lost to A.I. and machines. This fact has not been accepted in general, by economists. Until, not just the problem but new-industry, job creation is put into effect it is unlikely that wage inflation will take off. In turn, that slows the recovery and makes it vulnerable. Likewise, for fixed interest markets! The current equity, fixed interest rate levels are becoming more vulnerable by the day.

So we don’t move away from a weak dollar. We see the current rise as being short lived before the dollar resumes its fall. This translates into gold holding current levels in currencies other than the dollar, then rising in the dollar once more. It will see a good boost in the Autumn when the gold ‘season’ kicks off.

Gold ETFs –

There were sales from the SPDR gold ETF (GLD) of 4.731 tonnes but no change in the Gold Trust (IAU) holdings on Friday. The SPDR gold ETF and Gold Trust holdings are at 787.144 tonnes and at 211.43 tonnes respectively.